Reema Threading

90% of 739 customers recommend

In a Nutshell

New Orleans–style shaved ice in more than 30 flavors can be infused with sour mix or layered with ice cream

The Fine Print

Expires 120 days after purchase.
Limit 1 per person. Limit 1 per visit. Must use promotional value in 1 visit.
Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Sno-Biggie

The cold, creamy texture of a sno-ball feels great until you have to sit in a pile of them. Savor sno-balls inside your body with this Groupon.

$10 for Two Groupons, Each Good for $10 Worth of Frozen Treats ($20 Total Value)

The menu features sno-balls with ice cream ($3.50–$5.50) and without ice cream ($2.75–$4.75) in flavors such as root beer, wedding cake, and chai latte. Groupons must be used over separate visits.

Sno-Biggie

As recounted in the Los Alamitos-Seal Beach Patch, it was a hot day in July when JoAnn Buday's daughter ran into the house, breathlessly gushing about a newly discovered frozen treat called a "sno-ball." JoAnn was intrigued. She spent the day on the computer, her face illuminated in the glow of hundreds of shining reviews of sno-ball shops in New Orleans, where the dish originated. JoAnn had often dreamt of opening a frozen treat shop that would stand out among all the other yogurt and ice cream joints in southern California. Now, at last, she had a plan.

Today, JoAnn captains her own shop, whipping up the frosty snacks lauded by reporters from The Orange County Register. Beneath shelves of colorful syrups, JoAnn and her staff top fluffy shaved ice with more than 30 different types of syrups—including root beer, wine cooler, and coconut. They blend flavors and add layers of creamy ice cream to create imaginative combinations such as peach cobbler and caramel apple pop. Guests snack on frozen treats, hot dogs, and fresh baked goods on the tabletops that speckle the seating area. A colorful mural sweeps across the wall, depicting typical scenes from famous cities around the world, including diners lingering at a cafe in Paris and employed citizens paying their U.S. federal taxes in Seattle.